Title: Enzyme cofactors
1Enzyme cofactors
2Content of lectures
- Introduction into cofactors
- explanation of the differences between cofactors
- Types of cofactors (enzymatic reactions in large
multienzyme complexes involving several
cofactors) - cofactors derived from vitamins (part of large
complexes such as multienzyme pyruvate
dehydrogenase) - cofactors of oxidoreductases (NAD, NADP, FAD,
FMN) - cofactors of transferases (ATP, pyridoxal
phosphate, tetrahydrofolate etc.) - The importance of vitamins as cofactors (vitamin
C, A, E, K) - What are ferredoxins, methalloporphyrins.
3Cofactors importance
- Cofactor non-protein, low molecular compound of
enzyme - Cofactor - a co-catalyst required for enzyme
activity, "helper molecules" that assist in
biochemical transformations. - Apoenzyme - enzyme lacking cofactor (inactive)
- Holoenzyme - enzyme with cofactors (active)
- Classification
- loosely-bound cofactors termed coenzymes
- tightly-bound cofactors termed prosthetic groups
- Some enzymes or enzyme complexes require several
cofactors (pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme
complex)
4Difference between the coenzyme and prosthetic
group
- Coenzyme act as second substrate ? the enzyme
reaction is completed ? coenzyme is transferred
to another apoenzyme ? it regenerates when reacts
with another substrate (coupled reaction). - Prosthetic group covalently bound to the enzyme
regenerates in succession with two different
substrates.
5- Organic cofactors
- vitamins or vitamin derivatives (water-soluble
all B vitamins, vitamin C, lipid-soluble K, A,
E - heterocycles with the rest of the molecule of
phosphoric acid - many cofactors contain the nucleotide (AMP) as
part of their structure - Inorganic cofactors
- metal ions Mg2, Cu, Mn2, Zn2, Se, iron-sulfur
clusters
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7Cofactor Vitamin Enzyme reaction (example)
Thiamine diphosphate Thiamine, B1 Oxidative decarboxylation
FAD, FMN Riboflavin, B2 Redox reactions (transfer of H)
NAD, NADP Niacin, B3 Redox reactions (transfer of H)
Coenzyme A Pantothenic acid, B5 Metabolism of FA (transfer of acyl groups )
Pyridoxalphosphate Pyridoxine, B6 Transamination, decarboxylation of AA
Carboxybiotin Biotin, H, B7 Carboxylation (CO2)
Tetrahydrolic acid Folic acid, B9 Transfer of C1
Ascorbic acid Vitamin C Hydroxylation reaction (collagen)
cis-retinal opsin Retinol, A Electron transport , antioxidant
? Tocoferol, E Redox reaction, antioxidant
Menaquinone Vitamin K Transfer of carbonyl group and electrons
Lipoamide Lipoic acid Transfer of electrons and acyl group
Cobalamine Cobalamine, B12 Izomeration, transfer of methyl group
8Cofactor Group transferred
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) Phosphate group
S-adenosylmethionin (SAM) Methyl group
Coenzyme Q Electrons
Cytidine triphosphate (CTP) Diacylglycerols and lipid head groups
Glutathione Electrons
Heme Electrons
Tetrahydrobiopterin Oxygen atom and electrons
9Classification of cofactors by reactions that
help catalyze
- Cofactors of oxidoreductases
- NAD(P),
- FAD,
- cytochromes (containing heme),
- Fe-S complexes
- Cofactors that transport one carbon residues
- tetrahydrofolate,
- vitamin B12,
- S-adenosylmethionin,
- biotin (cofactor of carboxylases)
- Cofactors that transport acyl group
- lipoic acid (prosthetic group of PDH, a-KGDH),
- HSCoA,
- pyridoxal phosphate (transaminases)
10Cofactors for oxidoreductases
- Nikotinamide adenine dinukleotide (NAD)
- Nikotinamide adenine dinukleotide phosphate
(NADP) - Precursor is niacin (vitamin B3)
- Flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)
- Flavin mononucleotide (FMN)
- Precursor is riboflavin (vitamin B2)
- Coenzyme Q
- Cytochroms Fe3 e- ? Fe2 (cyt a1, cyt a3, cyt
b, cyt c) - Cu2 e- ? Cu (cyt a)
-
11NAD (NADP)
12The redox reaction of NAD
- In metabolic oxidation of nutrients ? NAD
accepts or donates electrons in redox reactions. - RH2 NAD ? NADH H R
- Reactions involve the removal of two hydrogen
atoms from the reactant (R), in the form of a
hydride ion (H-), and a proton (H). - The proton is released into solution, the
reductant RH2 is oxidized and NAD reduced to
NADH by transfer of the hydride to the
nicotinamide ring.
13FAD, FMN
14Vitamin B2
FMN ? ATP-dependent phosphorylation of
riboflavin FAD ? further reaction with ATP in
which its AMP moiety is transferred to FMN.
15Flavin Mechanisms
- Flavins are one- or two-electron transfer agents
- Name "flavin" comes from Latin flavius for
"yellow - The oxidized form is yellow, semiquinones are
blue or red and the reduced form is colorless
16Reduction and reoxidation of FMN and FAD
17Some enzymes containing FAD, FMN
- acyl-CoA dehydrogenase FAD
- succinate dehydrogenase FAD
- glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase FAD
- NADH reductase (complex I) FMN
18Koenzym Q
- Component of the electron transport chain
- Participates in aerobic cellular respiration,
generating energy in the form of ATP - Coenzyme Q in human mitochondria is CoQ10 (Q
the quinon head , 10 the number of isoprene
repeats in the tail - Hydrofilic head is movable, it transferres
electrons, polyisoprene tail is anchored in the
membrane..
Reduced form
Oxidized form
19Cofactors of transferases
- Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) ? phosphate
- Guanosit triphosphate (GTP) ? phosphate
- Pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) ? -NH3
- (pyridoxine, vitamin B6)
- Tetrahydrofolate (THF) ? C1-fragment
- (folic acid, vitamin B6)
-
- Coenzyme A (CoA, HS-Co-A) ? acyl
- S-adenosylmethionin (SAM) ? active methyl
20ATP
P - P - adenosin (ADP)
inorganic phosphate (Pi)
P - adenosin (AMP)
inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi)
- ATP transports chemical energy within cells for
metabolism - Substrate in signal tranduction pathways by
kinases (transferases) that phosphorylate
proteins and lipids - Energy stored in ATP may be released upon
hydrolysis of the phosphoanhydride bonds - Gama phosphate group has a higher energy of
hydrolysis than either the a- or ß-phosphate
21Pyridoxalfosfát (PLP)
- Prosthetic group of aminotransferases
- Coenzyme in all transamination reactions, and in
some decarboxylation and deamination reactions of
amino acids.
Pyridoxine (vit. B6)
Pyridoxal-5-phosphate (PLP)
Pyridoxamine-5-phosphate
22Thiamine pyrophosphate (diphosphate), TPP
- TPP is an active form of vitamin B1 (first
discovered vitamin). - TPP is consist of substituted rings (pyrimidine,
thiazole). Highly hydrophilic substance. - TPP catalyses the reversible cleavage of a
substrate compound at a C - C bond connecting a C
O group to an adjacent reactive group (usually
a carboxylic acid or an alcohol) - TPP transfers two-carbon residues in the
cytoplasmic transketolase reaction in pentose
phosphate pathway - Oxidative decarboxylation reaction of a-ketoacids
and formation of aldehydes (pyruvate ?
acetaldehyde), cofactor of multienzyme complexes
(PDH, a-KGDH)
23Tetrahydrofolate (THF)
- Active form is tetrahydrofolate
- Folates are donors of 1-C units for all oxidation
levels of carbon except that of CO2 - THF is coenzyme of transferases. N5,N10-THF
transfers one carbon units, methylene or
methenyl - This reaction is part of the synthesis of
nucleotides and nucleic acids.
24Tetrahydrofolate (THF)
25Coenzyme A
- Coenzyme A functions as an acyl group carrier
- A thiol can react with carboxylic acids to form
thioesters. - It assists in transferring fatty acids from the
cytoplasm to mitochondria - Acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) is a macroergic
compound effective in a variety of metabolic
reactions (b-oxidation of fatty acids,
biosynthesis of lipids)
26S-adenosylmethionin
27Biotin
- Condensate of urea and thiofene the rest of
valeric acid - Coenzyme in carboxylation reaction
- Prosthetic group of acetyl-CoA carboxylase and
other ATP-dependent carboxylases - Covalently attached to apoenzyme bound to e-amino
group of lysine.
28Lipoic acid
- Saturated fatty acid 8 carbons)
- Carbons 6, 7 a 8 constitute heterocycle with two
atoms of sulfur. - Is prosthetic group of enzymes, transmits
hydrogen and and acyl group . - Covalently attached to apoenzyme - binds an amide
bond to e-amino group of lysine, why it is also
called lipoamid. - Oxidation and decarboxylatio of a-ketoacids
(pyruvate dehydrogenase, a-ketoglutarate
dehydrogenase) - Antioxidant (reduced form is regenerated vit. C
and vit. E).
29Vitamin A and vision
- Vit. A is necessary to form rhodopsin (in rodes)
and iodopsin (in cones) - visual pigment. - Retinaldehyd is a prosthetic group of
light-sensitive opsin protein. - In the retina, all-trans-retinol is isomerized to
11-cis-retinol ? oxidized to 11-cis-retinaldehyd,
? reaction with opsin (Lys) ? to form the
holoprotein rhodopsin. - Absorption of light ? conformation changes of
opsin ? photorhodopsin.
30Vitamin K
Vitamin K1
Fyloquinone
- Vitamin K1 (fyloquinone) plant origin
- Vitamin K2 (menaquinone) normally produced by
bacteria in the large intestine - K1 a K2 are used differently in the body
- K1 used mainly for blood clothing
- K2 important in non-coagulation actions - as
in metabolism and bone mineralization, in cell
growth, metabolism of blood vessel walls cells.
Vitamin K2
Menaquinone
Synthetic derivatives of Vit.K
31Vitamin K - function
- Cofactor of liver microsomal carboxylase which
carboxylates glutamate residues to
g-carboxyglutamate during synthesis of
prothrombin and coagulation factors VII, IX a X
(posttranslation reaction). - Carboxylated glutamate chelates Ca2 ions,
permitting the binding of blood clotting proteins
to membranes. - Forms the binding site for Ca2 also in other
proteins osteocalcin.
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33Tocoferol, vitamin E
- alpha-tocopherolchinon formed by oxidation from
a-tocopherol is a cofactor in the synthesis of
mitochondrial unsaturated fatty acids.
Chromanol ring hydrophobic aliphatic side
chain
34Vitamin E as antioxidant
- Stops free radical reactions (peroxyl radicals
ROO? , oxygen radicals HO?, lipoperoxid radicals
LOO?). Chromanol ring with OH group ? uptake
radicals -
- ?-TOH ROO? ?-Toc? ROOH
- ROO? ?-Toc? ?TocOOR
-
-
35Vitamin C
- Hydroxylation of proline and lysine (collagen)
- Synthesis of collagen prolylhydroxylase,
lysylhydroxylase a lysyloxidase containe Fe2 and
ascorbate as cofactors. - Proline (lysine) a-ketoglutarate O2 ?
4-hydroxyproline (hydroxylysine) CO2
succinate - Metabolism of Tyr in brain
- Fe mobilization from spleen
- May prevent the toxic effects of some metals
- Ameliorates allergic responses
- Can stimulate the immune system
- Vitamin C is a reasonably strong reducing agent
- It functions as an electron carrier
36Vitamin C as antioxidant
37Ions as a cofactors
Ion Examples of enzymes containing this ion
Cu2 Cytochromoxidase, catalase
Fe2 a Fe3 Cytochroms, hydroxylases
Mg2 Glucose-6-phosphatase, hexokinase, DNA-polymerase,
Mn2 Arginase
Zn2 Alcohol dehydrogenase, DNA polymerase, carboanhydrase
Se Glutathionperoxidase
FeS proteins (Fe2S2) NADH dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase
38Ferredoxins
- FeS proteins ferredoxins - Fe2S2, Fe4S4
electron transfer - redox reaction in mitochondrial respiratory
chain (complex I and complex II) - NADH dehydrodenase, koenzym Q - cytochrom c
reductase, succinate koenzym Q reductase
39Metalloporphyrins - heme
- Organic, cyclic compounds derived from the
tetrapyrrole - porphyrin - four pyrrol rings are
linked with methylene bridges. - Complexes with metal ions
- heme Fe, oxygene transport
- chlorophyl Mg, photosynthesis
40Metalloporphyrins - cobalamin (vitamin B12)
- Chemically most complex vitamin
- Structurally similar to heme - complex of organic
compounds, atom within the molecule is Co, - In man there are two metabolically active forms
methylkobalamin and adenosylkobalamin. - Cobalamin catalyses two reactions
- cytoplasmic methylation of homocystein to
methionin. - mitochondrial methylmalonyl-CoA mutase
(methylmalonyl-CoA ? sukcynyl-CoA) needs deoxy
adenosylkobalamin.